Awesomesauce
Nov. 12th, 2007 09:13 pmWell, guess who got her letter of offer for her Masters today? Go me.
In other news of awesome, courtesy of
animator, the most awesome macro to ever awesome:

(Outside a cut since the image is small - let me know if it causes any problems for anyone.)
Also from
animator: The Order of the Science Scouts of Exemplary Repute and Above Average Physique. I qualify for way to many of those badges *g*
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In other news of awesome, courtesy of
(Outside a cut since the image is small - let me know if it causes any problems for anyone.)
Also from
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no subject
Date: 2007-11-17 03:18 am (UTC)Cause I'm interested if this is the same as the US - in Australia, a master in engineering is a professional qualification rather than a research one, normally requiring one year of coursework (two years part time in my case). We do a major research project as our honours year of our bachelors which satisfies the requirement for acceptance into a PhD, if we want to go down that path. Is it the same over the pond?
no subject
Date: 2007-11-17 04:20 am (UTC)But that's totally a digression. My masters is in business, not engineering (which is pretty common in manufacturing- you tend to do less technical stuff as you get promoted, not more). And we did a business related final project, which wasn't really research. It was a one year program full-time plus the project, or up to three years part time- and I had to do prereqs before I could start.
From there, I probably would qualify to go for a PhD in business, but might need a masters in engineering before I could pursue a PhD in engineering...requirements are not always the same at different schools, either.
Requirements to get in are fairly simple- there's a standardized test that's sort of a lowest-common-denominator minimum req, and then you put in an application form. Not too complex, as I recall. But then I was going to a state school, that happened to be near where I lived, not trying to get into one of the more prestigious institutions- I believe they have a lot more hoops to jump through.
no subject
Date: 2007-11-17 04:33 am (UTC)In Australia, it's unusual to find someone with a masters and a PhD - as I said, we have this thing called 'honours', which negates the need to do a masters for entry into a PhD. So theoretically, I could have gone directly from my undergrad degree to my PhD right now - in fact, I turned down a couple of offers to do just that! (Mostly because I liked the idea of getting paid... *g*) And no exams, at least that I know off, it's mostly applications and written stuff and interviews.
We have the same thing, doing less technical work as we get promoted - it's one of the reasons I'm doing this one now, while I still can *g*
Interesting how two different countries can have such different takes on things with the same name!